US4437051A - Method and apparatus for controlling induction motor - Google Patents

Method and apparatus for controlling induction motor Download PDF

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US4437051A
US4437051A US06/441,624 US44162482A US4437051A US 4437051 A US4437051 A US 4437051A US 44162482 A US44162482 A US 44162482A US 4437051 A US4437051 A US 4437051A
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current
speed
phase
inverter
value
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Nobuyoshi Muto
Hiroshi Nagase
Keijiro Sakai
Yasuo Matsuda
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Hitachi Ltd
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Hitachi Ltd
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02PCONTROL OR REGULATION OF ELECTRIC MOTORS, ELECTRIC GENERATORS OR DYNAMO-ELECTRIC CONVERTERS; CONTROLLING TRANSFORMERS, REACTORS OR CHOKE COILS
    • H02P21/00Arrangements or methods for the control of electric machines by vector control, e.g. by control of field orientation
    • H02P21/06Rotor flux based control involving the use of rotor position or rotor speed sensors
    • H02P21/08Indirect field-oriented control; Rotor flux feed-forward control
    • H02P21/09Field phase angle calculation based on rotor voltage equation by adding slip frequency and speed proportional frequency
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H02GENERATION; CONVERSION OR DISTRIBUTION OF ELECTRIC POWER
    • H02PCONTROL OR REGULATION OF ELECTRIC MOTORS, ELECTRIC GENERATORS OR DYNAMO-ELECTRIC CONVERTERS; CONTROLLING TRANSFORMERS, REACTORS OR CHOKE COILS
    • H02P2207/00Indexing scheme relating to controlling arrangements characterised by the type of motor
    • H02P2207/01Asynchronous machines

Definitions

  • the present invention relates to a method and apparatus for controlling an induction motor to run at a variable speed.
  • These slip frequencies are obtained as, ##EQU1## where K 2 is a gain constant.
  • the slip frequency value ⁇ S is added by a value representing the motor speed ⁇ M so as to provide a command frequency ⁇ 1 to the inverter.
  • the frequency of the primary current is controlled in accordance with the command frequency ⁇ 1 , so that the primary current is controlled by the primary current value i 1 .
  • phase tan -1 (I 2 /i 0 ) becomes the phase of the primary current. If this relation is directly applied to the PWM inverter, the phase compensation is not performed properly in a transient period, causing a transient oscillation in the motor torque to occur. This does not provide the improvement in the transient torque characteristics, and a high response operation of the induction motor cannot be expected.
  • Another object of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus for realizing a high response control for an induction motor.
  • Still another object of the present invention is to provide a simple method and apparatus for controlling an induction motor.
  • the difference between the command speed ( ⁇ REF ) and the actual motor speed ( ⁇ M ) is calculated, and the slip frequency value ( ⁇ S ) is obtained from the difference.
  • the slip frequency value is multiplied by the motor constant K 1 and transformed by the arctangential function, i.e., tan -1 ⁇ S ⁇ K 1 , so that the phase ( ⁇ 1 ) of the primary current is obtained.
  • the current phase value is multiplied by the gain constant (K 2 ) so that it is transforded into the phase ( ⁇ V ) of the primary voltage.
  • the primary voltage phase value is differentiated to obtain the phase compensation value ( ⁇ S '), which is added by the above-mentioned slip frequency value ( ⁇ S ) and the motor speed value ( ⁇ M ) so as to obtain the frequency command ( ⁇ 1 ) for the inverter.
  • the primary current command (I REF ) is calculated from the slip frequency value ( ⁇ S ), and the difference between the command value and the rectified primary current value (I L ) is integrated so as to obtain the amplitude ratio (K H ) of the inverter. Then, pulse width modulation of the inverter is carried out using the amplitude ratio and the frequency command.
  • FIG. 1 is a vectorial diagram useful to explain the principle of the present invention
  • FIG. 2 is a waveform chart showing the step response of the motor torque, the primary current and the amplitude ratio
  • FIG. 3 is a block diagram showing an embodiment of the present invention.
  • FIG. 4 is a timing chart explaining the operation of the pulse width modulation.
  • phase of the primary current of the induction motor is measured and it is converted into the phase of the primary voltage.
  • the following will describe the principle of conversion based on the d-q bi-axis theory.
  • Vds Stator d-axis voltage
  • Vqs Stator q-axis voltage
  • stator voltages Vds and Vqs are stator voltages Vds and Vqs.
  • E g is the gap voltage
  • FIG. 2 shows the result of simulation for the step response of the vector control system including the induction motor and PWM inverter, where curve 1 indicates the amplitude ratio K H , curve 2 indicates the motor torque, curve 3 indicated the primary current, and curve 4 indicates the slip frequency ⁇ S .
  • the simulation result for the dynamic characteristics was obtained by solving equation (1) for a 2.2 kW 6-pole induction motor.
  • the gain of phase compensation, i.e., ⁇ V / ⁇ 2 was set to 0.1, and its compensating response is shown by curve 5. It can be seen from the chart that the setup time of the primary current, amplitude ratio (voltage command to the PWM inverter) and torque is much reduced (1.5 ms approximately) relative to the motor time constant (110 ms in this example).
  • the arrangement includes a 3-phase AC power source 20, an inverter 21 for converting the AC power into the DC power, and a PWM inverter 22 for converting the DC power into another AC power.
  • the inverter 22 is controlled to provide a variable voltage and variable frequency in accordance with the PWM signal.
  • These sections 20, 21 and 22 in combination constitute a power converter of the PWM type.
  • the pulse-width modulated AC power is applied to an induction motor 23, which runs at a variable speed by receiving the output of the PWM inverter 22.
  • Reference number 24 denotes a speed detector for measuring the rotational speed (angular velocity) ⁇ M of the motor 23.
  • a rotary encoder is employed for the motor speed detector.
  • CT denotes a current transformer which constitutes in conjunction with a converter 25 a motor primary current detector for detecting and transducing the primary current of the motor into a DC voltage.
  • 400 is an automatic speed regulator (ASR) which receives the speed command ⁇ .sub. REF and actual speed value ⁇ M , and provides the control signal ⁇ S so that the difference between the command and actuatl speeds is nullified.
  • the control signal ⁇ S represents the slip frequency for the induction motor 23.
  • the ASR 400 consists of a subtractor 310 and a proportional and integrating amplifier (will be termed simply PI operational amplifier) which performs a proportional and integrating operations on the output of the subtracter 310.
  • ⁇ S of the ASR is a function generator which transforms the output ⁇ S of the ASR into the motor current command signal I REF .
  • 500 is an automatic current regurator (ACR) which receives the current command I REF and the detected current value I L to provide a control signal K H so that the difference of these current values is nullified.
  • the signal K H represents the amplitude ratio for the pulse width modulation control.
  • 600 is an arithmetic unit which receives the slip frequency value ⁇ S to provide a phase compensation signal ⁇ S '.
  • the unit 600 consists of a section (gain multiplier 27 and arctangential function generator 28) which calculates the current phase ⁇ I and a section (gain multiplier K 2 and differentiator 30) which converts the current phase ⁇ I into the voltage phase ⁇ V and calculated the phase compensation signal ⁇ S '.
  • 300 is an adder which adds the slip frequency value ⁇ S , the detector motor speed value ⁇ M and the phase compensation signal ⁇ S ' calculated by the unit 600, and provides the inverter frequency command ⁇ 1 which determines the output frequency of the inverter 22.
  • 33 is a pulse-width modulation processor which processes the input amplitude ratio K H and inverter frequency command ⁇ 1 so as to determine the waveform of the carrier and modulation wave.
  • PWM 34 is a PWM signal generator which forms the PWM signals (gate signals) in accordance with the output of the PWM processor 33, and supplies the signals to the PWM inverter 22.
  • the arrangement of FIG. 3 can partly be replaced with a microcomputer. Specifically, except for the principal circuit devices 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24, and the PWM signal generator 34, all or part of the remaining portions performing arithmetic processes can be replaced with a microcomputer.
  • the system operates so that the actual motor speed ⁇ M coincides with the speed command ⁇ REF .
  • the ASR 400 performs PI compensation for the difference ⁇ between ⁇ REF and ⁇ M , and provides the slip frequency ⁇ S .
  • the slip frequency ⁇ S is also supplied to the arithmetic unit 600 and adder 300.
  • the current phase value ⁇ 1 is given to the gain multiplier 29, which calculates the voltage phase ⁇ V according to equation (19).
  • the voltage phase value ⁇ V is given to the differentiator 30, which provides the phase compensation value ⁇ S '.
  • the adder 300 adds the slip frequency value ⁇ S , the motor speed value ⁇ M and the phase compensation signal ⁇ S ' to provide the inverter frequency command ⁇ 1 .
  • the ACR 500 calculates the PWM amplitude ratio K H from the current command I REF and the detected current value I L according to equation (20).
  • the output K H of the ACR 500 and the output ⁇ 1 of the adder 300 are supplied to the PWM processor 33, which determines the waveform of the carrier and modulation wave in accordance with the values of K H and ⁇ 1 .
  • the partition number N indicates the number of carrier waves during a half cycle of the modulated staircase wave. Comparison of the solid state section of the modulated staircase wave with the triangular wave gives the U-phase PWM signal E U , comparison of the dashed line section of the staircase wave with the triangular wave gives the V-phase PWM signal E V , and comparison of the dot-dashed line section of the staircase wave with the triangular wave gives the W-phase PWM signal E W .
  • the PWM processor 33 performs the following processes.
  • the PWM processor serves to calculate the peak value H of the carrier wave and the modulation levels D 1 and D 2 of the modulation wave (staircase wave).
  • the PWM signal generator 34 receives the values H, D 1 and D 2 , and produces the PWM signals (E U , E V and E W ) as shown in FIG. 4.
  • the inventive control method is particularly suitable for realizing a control system which is partly or entirely replaced with a microcomputer.
  • the phase compensation which matches the voltage-based PWM inverter can be performed, whereby high response torque characteristics can be obtained.
  • This feature allows the inventive method and apparatus to be applied effectively to extensive industrial fields including AC motor spindle drive systems for machine tools.

Abstract

Disclosed is a method and apparatus for operating an induction motor by an inverter of the pulse-width modulation (PWM) type, wherein the slip frequency is calculated from the speed command and the actual motor speed so as to produce the phase compensation signal, and the frequency command for the inverter is produced by adding the phase compensation signal, the slip frequency signal and the motor speed signal. The primary current command is calculated from the slip frequency, the amplitude ratio of pulse-width modulation is calculated basing on the primary current command and the actual primary current, and the inverter is controlled in accordance with the amplitude ratio so as to control the primary current of the induction motor.

Description

The present invention relates to a method and apparatus for controlling an induction motor to run at a variable speed.
In operating an induction motor through a power converter such as an inverter, it is known that a satisfactory torque performance is obtained constantly in consideration of the magnetic saturation in the induction motor by controlling the slip frequency as a function of the primary current of the motor. This method, however, does not provide a high response control of the induction motor and has a problem of causing a transient oscillation in the torque. In order to improve the transient torque characteristics, there is proposed a vector control method of the frequency control type as disclosed in Japanese Patent Application Laid-Open No. 149314/77. This method features as follows.
First, the torque command is multiplied by the secondary current conversion gain K1 to obtain the secondary current value I2, which causes a function generator to provide a primary current value i1 in accordance with the function, i1 =√I2 2 +i0 2 (where i0 is a constant related to the motor excitation current). The secondary current value I2 is used to obtain the slip frequency ωS, which is the sum of the steady-state slip frequency ωS1 and a slip frequency ωS2 for a transient torque variation caused by the secondary current I2, i.e., ωSS1S2. These slip frequencies are obtained as, ##EQU1## where K2 is a gain constant. The slip frequency value ωS is added by a value representing the motor speed ωM so as to provide a command frequency ω1 to the inverter. The frequency of the primary current is controlled in accordance with the command frequency ω1, so that the primary current is controlled by the primary current value i1.
This control achieves high response operation of the induction motor. However, when this method is applied to the induction motor control having a pulse width modulation (PWM) inverter of the voltage type as a power converting means, various problems arise.
In this method, when obtaining the slip frequency ωS2 to be compensated, its phase tan-1 (I2 /i0) becomes the phase of the primary current. If this relation is directly applied to the PWM inverter, the phase compensation is not performed properly in a transient period, causing a transient oscillation in the motor torque to occur. This does not provide the improvement in the transient torque characteristics, and a high response operation of the induction motor cannot be expected.
In addition, when the foregoing prior art method is intended to be carried out using a digital computer, the computational process is too complicated for a microcomputer with a relatively low processing speed, making it difficult to realize a microcomputer based system. It is an object of the present invention to provide a method and apparatus for controlling an induction motor suitable for a system of operating the induction motor using a voltage-based PWM inverter.
Another object of the present invention is to provide a method and apparatus for realizing a high response control for an induction motor.
Still another object of the present invention is to provide a simple method and apparatus for controlling an induction motor.
According to one aspect of the present invention, in operating an induction motor which is powered by a pulse width modulation (PWM) inverter, the difference between the command speed (ωREF) and the actual motor speed (ωM) is calculated, and the slip frequency value (ωS) is obtained from the difference. The slip frequency value is multiplied by the motor constant K1 and transformed by the arctangential function, i.e., tan-1 ωS ·K1, so that the phase (θ1) of the primary current is obtained. The current phase value is multiplied by the gain constant (K2) so that it is transforded into the phase (θV) of the primary voltage. The primary voltage phase value is differentiated to obtain the phase compensation value (ωS '), which is added by the above-mentioned slip frequency value (ωS) and the motor speed value (ωM) so as to obtain the frequency command (ω1) for the inverter. The primary current command (IREF) is calculated from the slip frequency value (ωS), and the difference between the command value and the rectified primary current value (IL) is integrated so as to obtain the amplitude ratio (KH) of the inverter. Then, pulse width modulation of the inverter is carried out using the amplitude ratio and the frequency command.
The present invention will now be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
FIG. 1 is a vectorial diagram useful to explain the principle of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a waveform chart showing the step response of the motor torque, the primary current and the amplitude ratio;
FIG. 3 is a block diagram showing an embodiment of the present invention; and
FIG. 4 is a timing chart explaining the operation of the pulse width modulation.
Before entering into the detailed description of the embodiment shown in FIG. 3, fundamentals of the invention will be explained in connection with FIGS. 1 and 2.
First, the phase of the primary current of the induction motor is measured and it is converted into the phase of the primary voltage. The following will describe the principle of conversion based on the d-q bi-axis theory.
According to the d-q bi-axis theory, the voltage-current equations for a 2-phase induction motor are given as follows. ##EQU2## where p signifies d/dt, l'1 =l1 +lm and l'2 =l2 +lm. At the same time, the motor torque is given as follows.
T=Pl.sub.m (ids·iqr-iqs·idr)             (2)
where,
p: Number of pole pairs
Vds: Stator d-axis voltage
Vqs: Stator q-axis voltage
ids: Stator d-axis current
iqs: Stator q-axis current
idr: Rotor d-axis current
iqr: Rotor q-axis current
r1 : Primary winding resistance
r2 : Secondary winding resistance
l1 : Primary leakage inductance
l2 : Secondary leakage inductance
lm : Excitation winding inductance
ω1 : Inverter frequency
Setting the d-axis to coincide with the magnetic flux axis gives
 ids=I.sub.m and iqs=I.sub.2                               (3)
Here, the condition that the magnetic flux Im is constant (dIm /dt=0) and the control condition for the slip frequency ωS :
ω.sub.S =r.sub.2 ·I.sub.2 /l'.sub.2 ·I.sub.m (4)
are introduced as a well known condition of vector control.
Substituting equations (3) and (4) into equation (1) gives
iqr=I.sub.2 l.sub.m /l'.sub.2 and idr=0                    (5)
The stator voltages Vds and Vqs are
Vds=r.sub.1 ·I.sub.m -ω.sub.1 l'.sub.1 (1-l.sup.2.sub.m /l'.sub.1 l'.sub.2)I.sub.2                                (6) ##EQU3##
a=1-l.sup.2.sub.m /l'.sub.1 ·'.sub.2              (8)
Since the value of the leakage factor a is very small, the transient term of equation (7) can be ignored and the voltage can be estimated solely by the constant steady state term, whereby a high response control is made possible.
In this case, the motor torque of equation (2) is reduced to as
T=P·(l.sup.2.sub.m /l.sub.2)·I.sub.m ·I.sub.2 (9)
This shows that the motor torque is proportional to I2 provided that Im is constant. Thus, the transfer function of the torque against the secondary current is made constant.
Next, phases θV and θI of the primary voltage E1 and primary current I1 produced by the secondary voltage E2 and excitation voltage Em, and the secondary current I2 and excitation current Im, respectively, will be considered. Ignoring the transient term of equation (7), there are relations of Em and -E2 for the magnitude of Em and E2, Vqs and Vds due to the direction of the d and q axes, the vectorial relations expressed by equations (6) and (7) becomes as follows.
E.sub.2 =-r.sub.1 I.sub.m +jω.sub.1 al'.sub.1 I.sub.2 (10)
E.sub.m =jω.sub.1 l.sub.1 I.sub.m +r.sub.1 I.sub.2 +E.sub.g (11)
E.sub.g =jω.sub.1 l.sub.m I.sub.m                    (12)
where Eg is the gap voltage.
FIG. 1 depicts in vectorial diagram the equations (10), (11) and (12) on conditions: X=ω1 al1, X11 l1 and Xm1 lm.
In FIG. 1, the current phase θI and voltage phase θV are given
θ.sub.I =tan.sup.-1 (I.sub.2 /I.sub.m)               (13) ##EQU4## The gain θ.sub.V /θ.sub.I has a value of around 0.1 for a 2.2 kW induction motor.
FIG. 2 shows the result of simulation for the step response of the vector control system including the induction motor and PWM inverter, where curve 1 indicates the amplitude ratio KH, curve 2 indicates the motor torque, curve 3 indicated the primary current, and curve 4 indicates the slip frequency ωS. The simulation result for the dynamic characteristics was obtained by solving equation (1) for a 2.2 kW 6-pole induction motor. The gain of phase compensation, i.e., θV2, was set to 0.1, and its compensating response is shown by curve 5. It can be seen from the chart that the setup time of the primary current, amplitude ratio (voltage command to the PWM inverter) and torque is much reduced (1.5 ms approximately) relative to the motor time constant (110 ms in this example).
Various simulation results show that control performances similar to the above example can be obtained with the phase compensation gain ranging from 0.07 to 0.2, however, the direct use of the current phase as the voltage phase deteriorates the setup characteristics of the motor torque.
The following will describe the arrangement of the overall vector control system including the above-mentioned phase compensation system.
The value of the primary current I1 and its phase θI can be expressed using the above-mentioned Im and I2 as follows. ##EQU5##
θ.sub.I =tan.sup.-1 (I.sub.2 /I.sub.m)               (16)
Using the control condition in equation (4), the equations (15) and (16) can be expressed as functions of the slip frequency ωS as follows. ##EQU6##
θ.sub.I =tan.sup.-1 (K.sub.1 ω.sub.S)          (18)
where ##EQU7##
In addition, the following relations are introduced as gains for converting from the current-based values to the voltage-based values.
Phase converting gain: K.sub.2 =θ.sub.V /θ.sub.I (19)
Amplitude converting gain: K.sub.H =K.sub.3 (I.sub.REF -I.sub.L) (20)
Thus, all operating parameters in ASR system for evaluating ωS and ACR system for evaluating KH can be handled as DC values, that considerably simplifies the computational process when performed by a microcomputer.
One embodiment of the present invention will now be described with reference to FIG. 3. In the figure, the arrangement includes a 3-phase AC power source 20, an inverter 21 for converting the AC power into the DC power, and a PWM inverter 22 for converting the DC power into another AC power. The inverter 22 is controlled to provide a variable voltage and variable frequency in accordance with the PWM signal. These sections 20, 21 and 22 in combination constitute a power converter of the PWM type. The pulse-width modulated AC power is applied to an induction motor 23, which runs at a variable speed by receiving the output of the PWM inverter 22. Reference number 24 denotes a speed detector for measuring the rotational speed (angular velocity) ωM of the motor 23. In this example, a rotary encoder is employed for the motor speed detector. CT denotes a current transformer which constitutes in conjunction with a converter 25 a motor primary current detector for detecting and transducing the primary current of the motor into a DC voltage. 400 is an automatic speed regulator (ASR) which receives the speed command ω.sub. REF and actual speed value ωM, and provides the control signal ωS so that the difference between the command and actuatl speeds is nullified. The control signal ωS represents the slip frequency for the induction motor 23. The ASR 400 consists of a subtractor 310 and a proportional and integrating amplifier (will be termed simply PI operational amplifier) which performs a proportional and integrating operations on the output of the subtracter 310. 31 is a function generator which transforms the output ωS of the ASR into the motor current command signal IREF. 500 is an automatic current regurator (ACR) which receives the current command IREF and the detected curent value IL to provide a control signal KH so that the difference of these current values is nullified. The signal KH represents the amplitude ratio for the pulse width modulation control. 600 is an arithmetic unit which receives the slip frequency value ωS to provide a phase compensation signal ωS '. The unit 600 consists of a section (gain multiplier 27 and arctangential function generator 28) which calculates the current phase θI and a section (gain multiplier K2 and differentiator 30) which converts the current phase θI into the voltage phase θV and calculated the phase compensation signal ωS '. 300 is an adder which adds the slip frequency value ωS, the detector motor speed value ωM and the phase compensation signal ωS ' calculated by the unit 600, and provides the inverter frequency command ω1 which determines the output frequency of the inverter 22. 33 is a pulse-width modulation processor which processes the input amplitude ratio KH and inverter frequency command ω1 so as to determine the waveform of the carrier and modulation wave. 34 is a PWM signal generator which forms the PWM signals (gate signals) in accordance with the output of the PWM processor 33, and supplies the signals to the PWM inverter 22. The arrangement of FIG. 3 can partly be replaced with a microcomputer. Specifically, except for the principal circuit devices 20, 21, 22, 23 and 24, and the PWM signal generator 34, all or part of the remaining portions performing arithmetic processes can be replaced with a microcomputer.
The operation of the arrangement shown in FIG. 3 will be described in the following. The system operates so that the actual motor speed ωM coincides with the speed command ωREF. The ASR 400 performs PI compensation for the difference Δω between ωREF and ωM, and provides the slip frequency ωS. In response to the slip frequency ωS, the function generator 31 produces the primary current command IREF according to the function IREF =√1+K2 1 ω2 S. The slip frequency ωS is also supplied to the arithmetic unit 600 and adder 300. The multiplier 27 in the arithmetic unit 600 multiplies the ωS by the gain K1 (K1 =l2 +lm /r2) so as to obtain the ratio K1 ·ωS of the secondary current to the excitation current. The value of the ratio is given to the arctangential function generator 28, which calculates the value θ.sub. I =tan-1 (K1 ωS) according to equation (18). The current phase value θ1 is given to the gain multiplier 29, which calculates the voltage phase θV according to equation (19). The voltage phase value θV is given to the differentiator 30, which provides the phase compensation value ωS '. The adder 300 adds the slip frequency value ωS, the motor speed value ωM and the phase compensation signal ωS ' to provide the inverter frequency command ω1. The ACR 500 calculates the PWM amplitude ratio KH from the current command IREF and the detected current value IL according to equation (20). The output KH of the ACR 500 and the output ω1 of the adder 300 are supplied to the PWM processor 33, which determines the waveform of the carrier and modulation wave in accordance with the values of KH and ω1.
The processing by the PWM processor will be described in connection with FIG. 4 which shows the modulation with the partition number of N=15. The partition number N indicates the number of carrier waves during a half cycle of the modulated staircase wave. Comparison of the solid state section of the modulated staircase wave with the triangular wave gives the U-phase PWM signal EU, comparison of the dashed line section of the staircase wave with the triangular wave gives the V-phase PWM signal EV, and comparison of the dot-dashed line section of the staircase wave with the triangular wave gives the W-phase PWM signal EW. The PWM processor 33 performs the following processes.
First, the processor 33 calculates the peak value H of the triangular wave form the inverter frequency command ω11 =2πf1), the partition number N, and the basic timing T (μs) of the triangular wave according to the following equation. ##EQU8## where f11 /2π The modulation level D2 is calculated from the peak value H and the amplitude ratio KH according to D2 =KH ·H, then the modulation level D1 is calculated from D2 according to D1 =αD2, where α is a proportional factor determined in consideration of harmonics in the PWM signal and in this example α=0.25. Thus the PWM processor serves to calculate the peak value H of the carrier wave and the modulation levels D1 and D2 of the modulation wave (staircase wave).
The PWM signal generator 34 receives the values H, D1 and D2, and produces the PWM signals (EU, EV and EW) as shown in FIG. 4. The PWM inverter 22 has the gates controlled by these PWM signals so as to provide the AC power with a controlled voltage and frequency for the induction motor 23. Then the induction motor 23 is energized and controlled to a speed of ωREFM steadily.
By the foregoing arrangement of the motor speed control system, a high response speed control is achieved and a transient oscillation in the motor torque is prevented. Moreover, all detected signals are converted into DC signals before entering the signals into the control system so that the entire computational process is performed on a DC basis, resulting in a considerably simplified arithmetic operations. The inventive control method is particularly suitable for realizing a control system which is partly or entirely replaced with a microcomputer.
It should be noted that the foregoing embodiment is arranged to calculate the primary current and its phase as functions of the slip frequency ωS using equations (17) and (18), however, arrangement may be made so that these values are calculated as functions of the secondary current I2 using equations (15) and (16).
According to the present invention, the phase compensation which matches the voltage-based PWM inverter can be performed, whereby high response torque characteristics can be obtained. This feature allows the inventive method and apparatus to be applied effectively to extensive industrial fields including AC motor spindle drive systems for machine tools.

Claims (4)

We claim:
1. An induction motor control system comprising an inverter for producing AC power by pulse-width modulation, an induction motor powered by said inverter, a speed detector for measuring the rotational speed of said induction motor, a current detector for measuring the primary current of said induction motor, a speed controller which receives a speed command and output of said speed detector so as to provide a speed control signal, a current controller which receives said speed control signal and output of said current detector so as to provide a current control signal, an adder which adds output of said speed detector and said speed control signal so as to provide an inverter frequency command, and a pulse-width modulator which produces a pulse-width modulation signal in accordance with outputs of said current controller and said adder and supplies said pulse-width modulation signal to said inverter, wherein said system further comprises a computational means which receives said speed control signal and calculates the value of phase compensation, output of said means being supplied to said adder so that it is added to output of said speed detector and said speed control signal, output of said adder being supplied as said inverter frequency command to said pulse-width modulator.
2. A control system according to claim 1, wherein said phase compensation value computational means comprises a first computational section which receives said speed control signal and calculates the phase of current and a second computational section which receives said current phase, converts it into the phase of voltage, then calculates a phase compensation signal.
3. A method of controlling an induction motor powered by an inverter which produces AC power by pulse-width modulation, comprising the steps of calculating a difference between a speed command and an actual motor speed, calculating a slip frequency basing on said difference, calculating a phase compensation value basing on said slip frequency, providing a frequency command to said inverter by adding said phase compensation value, said slip frequency value and said motor speed value, calculating a primary current command from said slip frequency value, calculating an amplitude ratio for said inverter basing on a difference between said primary current command and a detected primary current value, and performing pulse-width modulation for said inverter in accordance with said amplitude ratio and said frequency command.
4. A control method according to claim 3, wherein said phase compensation value is obtained through the steps of multiplying said slip frequency value by a motor dependent current, calculating the arctangential function for the result of said multiplication so as to obtain the phase of the primary current, multiplying said primary current phase value by a conversion gain so that said primary current phase is converted into a primary voltage phase, and differentiating said primary voltage phase value to obtain said phase compensation value.
US06/441,624 1981-11-16 1982-11-15 Method and apparatus for controlling induction motor Expired - Fee Related US4437051A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
JP56-182304 1981-11-16
JP56182304A JPS5886888A (en) 1981-11-16 1981-11-16 Control system of induction motor

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Cited By (24)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4524310A (en) * 1982-01-11 1985-06-18 Hitachi, Ltd. Method and apparatus of controlling induction motors
DE3518450A1 (en) * 1984-06-18 1985-12-19 Mitsubishi Denki K.K., Tokio/Tokyo Method for controlling an AC induction motor
US4625159A (en) * 1984-12-27 1986-11-25 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Control apparatus for elevator
DE3529591A1 (en) * 1985-08-19 1987-02-26 Siemens Ag Method and device for operating an invertor
WO1988001449A1 (en) * 1986-08-22 1988-02-25 Otis Elevator Company Motor control apparatus
US4763057A (en) * 1983-12-30 1988-08-09 Kollmorgen Technologies Corporation Control for improving induction transient response by excitation angle control
US4777422A (en) * 1986-11-07 1988-10-11 Eaton Corporation Induction motor flux estimator/controller
US4818890A (en) * 1986-11-14 1989-04-04 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Turbine helper drive apparatus
US4940927A (en) * 1985-08-29 1990-07-10 Century Electric, Inc. Three-phase A-C speed control for variable torque motor
US5010288A (en) * 1989-03-21 1991-04-23 Gec Alsthom Sa Vector control system for a squirrel-cage asynchronous electric motor
US5032771A (en) * 1990-08-09 1991-07-16 Allen-Bradley Company, Inc. Slip control based on sensing voltage fed to an induction motor
US5132599A (en) * 1988-01-29 1992-07-21 Fanuc Limited Velocity control apparatus
US5146148A (en) * 1988-11-04 1992-09-08 Europe Patent Ltd. Process and a device for changing the effective speed of a polyphase asynchronous motor and a suitable motor system for the application of the process
US5191273A (en) * 1990-11-28 1993-03-02 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Operating control device and method for wound-rotor induction machine
US5231339A (en) * 1990-03-16 1993-07-27 Hitachi, Ltd. Control device for induction motor
US5477121A (en) * 1992-12-16 1995-12-19 Kci Konecranes International Corporation Procedure and apparatus for compensating the slip of an induction machine
US5844397A (en) * 1994-04-29 1998-12-01 Reda Pump Downhole pumping system with variable speed pulse width modulated inverter coupled to electrical motor via non-gap transformer
US5909098A (en) * 1996-05-02 1999-06-01 Reda Pump Downhole pumping system with variable speed pulse-width modulated inverter coupled to electrical motor via non-gap transformer
US6320286B1 (en) * 1999-09-01 2001-11-20 Ramachandran Ramarathnam Portable electric tool
US20030184249A1 (en) * 2002-03-28 2003-10-02 Seagate Technology Llc Limited current sliding mode control for low RPM spindle motor speed regulation
US20070085512A1 (en) * 2005-10-14 2007-04-19 Denso Corporation Vehicle-generator control device
US20080203964A1 (en) * 2007-02-27 2008-08-28 Ricoh Company,Limited Method and device for controlling motor, and image forming apparatus
US9441028B2 (en) 2008-12-08 2016-09-13 Novo Nordisk A/S Counter current purification of polypeptides
US20170163188A1 (en) * 2014-08-22 2017-06-08 Continental Teves Ag & Co. Ohg Method and device for operating an electric machine

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GB2192503B (en) * 1986-04-12 1990-10-03 Auto Wrappers Producing a succession of filled sealed packs

Family Cites Families (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3896356A (en) * 1973-01-24 1975-07-22 Gen Electric Method and control system for improved stability of an induction motor via independent voltage, synchronous frequency, and slip frequency control at an operating point
US4041361A (en) * 1975-10-14 1977-08-09 General Electric Company Constant torque induction motor drive system
JPS6019235B2 (en) * 1976-06-08 1985-05-15 株式会社東芝 Induction motor control device
JPS6042709B2 (en) * 1978-09-29 1985-09-24 株式会社東芝 induction motor control device
JPS5928146B2 (en) * 1978-11-04 1984-07-11 ファナック株式会社 Induction motor drive control method

Cited By (29)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4524310A (en) * 1982-01-11 1985-06-18 Hitachi, Ltd. Method and apparatus of controlling induction motors
US4763057A (en) * 1983-12-30 1988-08-09 Kollmorgen Technologies Corporation Control for improving induction transient response by excitation angle control
DE3518450A1 (en) * 1984-06-18 1985-12-19 Mitsubishi Denki K.K., Tokio/Tokyo Method for controlling an AC induction motor
US4625159A (en) * 1984-12-27 1986-11-25 Mitsubishi Denki Kabushiki Kaisha Control apparatus for elevator
DE3529591A1 (en) * 1985-08-19 1987-02-26 Siemens Ag Method and device for operating an invertor
US4940927A (en) * 1985-08-29 1990-07-10 Century Electric, Inc. Three-phase A-C speed control for variable torque motor
EP0278987B1 (en) 1986-08-22 1993-02-10 Otis Elevator Company Motor control apparatus
WO1988001449A1 (en) * 1986-08-22 1988-02-25 Otis Elevator Company Motor control apparatus
US4870334A (en) * 1986-08-22 1989-09-26 Otis Elevator Company Motor control apparatus
US4777422A (en) * 1986-11-07 1988-10-11 Eaton Corporation Induction motor flux estimator/controller
US4818890A (en) * 1986-11-14 1989-04-04 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Turbine helper drive apparatus
US5132599A (en) * 1988-01-29 1992-07-21 Fanuc Limited Velocity control apparatus
US5146148A (en) * 1988-11-04 1992-09-08 Europe Patent Ltd. Process and a device for changing the effective speed of a polyphase asynchronous motor and a suitable motor system for the application of the process
US5010288A (en) * 1989-03-21 1991-04-23 Gec Alsthom Sa Vector control system for a squirrel-cage asynchronous electric motor
US5231339A (en) * 1990-03-16 1993-07-27 Hitachi, Ltd. Control device for induction motor
US5032771A (en) * 1990-08-09 1991-07-16 Allen-Bradley Company, Inc. Slip control based on sensing voltage fed to an induction motor
US5191273A (en) * 1990-11-28 1993-03-02 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Operating control device and method for wound-rotor induction machine
US5477121A (en) * 1992-12-16 1995-12-19 Kci Konecranes International Corporation Procedure and apparatus for compensating the slip of an induction machine
US5844397A (en) * 1994-04-29 1998-12-01 Reda Pump Downhole pumping system with variable speed pulse width modulated inverter coupled to electrical motor via non-gap transformer
US5909098A (en) * 1996-05-02 1999-06-01 Reda Pump Downhole pumping system with variable speed pulse-width modulated inverter coupled to electrical motor via non-gap transformer
US6320286B1 (en) * 1999-09-01 2001-11-20 Ramachandran Ramarathnam Portable electric tool
US20030184249A1 (en) * 2002-03-28 2003-10-02 Seagate Technology Llc Limited current sliding mode control for low RPM spindle motor speed regulation
US20070085512A1 (en) * 2005-10-14 2007-04-19 Denso Corporation Vehicle-generator control device
US7423351B2 (en) * 2005-10-14 2008-09-09 Denso Corporation Vehicle-generator control device
US20080203964A1 (en) * 2007-02-27 2008-08-28 Ricoh Company,Limited Method and device for controlling motor, and image forming apparatus
US7911168B2 (en) * 2007-02-27 2011-03-22 Ricoh Company, Limited Method and device for controlling motor, and image forming apparatus
US9441028B2 (en) 2008-12-08 2016-09-13 Novo Nordisk A/S Counter current purification of polypeptides
US20170163188A1 (en) * 2014-08-22 2017-06-08 Continental Teves Ag & Co. Ohg Method and device for operating an electric machine
US10236809B2 (en) * 2014-08-22 2019-03-19 Continental Teves Ag & Co. Ohg Method and device for operating an electric machine

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
EP0082303B1 (en) 1986-05-21
EP0082303A1 (en) 1983-06-29
DE3271272D1 (en) 1986-06-26
JPH0548079B2 (en) 1993-07-20
JPS5886888A (en) 1983-05-24

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